Higher IQ In Childhood Linked To A Long Life: Study

Lifestyle can also be an important component in the effect of intelligence on differences in mortality. (Image courtesy: Google)

A latest study has reveled that, higher intelligence (IQ) in childhood is associated with a lower lifetime risk of major causes of death.

The study showed higher IQ in childhood is associated with a lower lifetime risk of major causes of death like heart disease, stroke, smoking related cancers, respiratory disease and dementia.

Further, lifestyle, especially tobacco smoking, can be an important component in the effect of intelligence on differences in mortality, the researchers said.

“The study confirms that intelligence test scores in childhood are significantly associated with subsequent mortality. Importantly, it shows that childhood IQ is strongly associated with causes of death that are, to a great extent, dependent on already known risk factors,” said Daniel Falkstedt, Assistant Professor at the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden.

“Tobacco smoking and its distribution along the socioeconomic spectrum could be of particular importance here. It remains to be seen if this is the full story or if IQ signals something deeper, and possibly genetic, in its relation to longevity,” Falkstedt added.

For the study, published in the journal The BMJ (British Medical Journal), the team of researchers from the University of Edinburgh examined the association between intelligence test scores measured at age 11 and leading causes of death in men and women up to age 79.

Their findings are based on data from 33,536 men and 32,229 women born in Scotland in 1936, who took a validated childhood intelligence test at age 11, and who could be linked to cause of death data up to December 2015.